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    Teahouse of the Almighty

    Page 4
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      Let me cross my legs,

      slow

      like the colored girls do,

      and let me feel your eyes go there.

      Let me feed on glory and grow fat.

      Meanwhile, lover, let’s fill this wicked church with music.

      Let me lean into this story, for once,

      without your mouth on me. The music a lit match

      under my skin and I dance,

      all legs and thunderous and heels too high,

      I dance cheap perfume and black nail polish.

      Sharkskin congregation, heads pressed,

      attitudes too tight, won’t scream

      until it gets to be too much, won’t beg for mercy

      until I wreck the landscape with my hips.

      Bar stools filling, everybody waiting for the glory

      to move through me, fill me with hosannas,

      rock me with hallelujahs, to shake these bored bones.

      They wait for you, supreme love, to pull me out

      onto the dance floor, make me kick my heels above my head.

      High heels ’bove my nappy head.

      While they wait, I will dance with the saxman,

      I will shimmer as he presses my keys.

      Him and me boppin’, we are wicked church.

      So don’t play, do not play, did you hear me tell you

      not to play me that way?

      (The way I pray to be played.)

      Mama say the Lord enters you in stages

      (Play me that way)

      First like a lit match under your skin

      (Play me that way)

      Then like an animal biting through bone with soft teeth

      (Play me)

      Mama say lie still and wait for glory

      (that way)

      to consume me

      (that way)

      Press my keys

      (that way)

      Press my keys

      (that way)

      Don’t pay me no mind, lover.

      I always shudder

      when I pray.

      IN THE AUDIENCE TONIGHT

      for Philip

      She is unnerved, anxious

      at the state of the world,

      but he insists that she uncoil.

      The fluorescent light overhead

      leaves her stretched bare,

      vaguely ashamed of the ease

      with which she’s been translated.

      In her language, exclamations

      are held in the mouth

      until they are too weak to escape.

      They are both the children

      of their absent fathers. His dad

      was a sleek guitar neck,

      hers a gritty dollop of Delta

      cocky behind the steering of a car

      propped up on northern wheels.

      Their fathers are the dead

      puppeteers who push them

      toward one another

      then pull them apart,

      who jerk tangled strings

      and teach them the blues out loud.

      It will be hard to recall a time

      when they were exactly

      what they are now,

      poised to become all of it

      in spite of themselves.

      His singing burns

      like the blue sun

      inked on his forearm.

      She fully intends one word

      to turn the earth’s heart.

      Such merriment

      as the fathers watch their children.

      They’re those cackling, unruly ghosts

      taking up no space at all in the third row,

      the ones who tipped in

      when the room’s back was turned.

      Guffawing until Camel spittle

      and penny whiskey

      spew from their grins,

      they bob bony noggins

      to the blue grind

      and sing along.

      They love that their offspring

      waste their time so valiantly,

      shapeshifting,

      offering their verse and voltage

      to crowds of solemn drunks,

      hanging for all they’re worth

      to one cracking point of a star.

      WEAPON ULTIMATE

      The Nigerian women smeared

      a thick line of Texaco’s oil

      under each eye, warrior warnings,

      then crouched low and sprang

      with the boulders of their bodies,

      their stout ashy legs and mad wrists,

      holding their paper banners with words

      scratched out and respelled:

      Give work to our husbands,

      our brothers, our sons.

      Give us light and water,

      or pack now.

      The pure singular force

      of themselves.

      Their glorious damnable throats.

      You remember. Pack now.

      Remember.

      SCRIBE

      My son, budding dreadhead, has taken a break from obsessively twisting and waxing his naps, swelling his delts, and busting rhymes with no aim, backbeat, or future beyond the common room. For want of a plumper canteen, the child has laid claim to a jailhouse vocation.

      I’m the writer, Mama, he tells me.

      That’s what I’m known for in here.

      In my kitchen, clutching the receiver, I want to laugh, because my son has always been the writer, muttering witness to the underbelly, his rebel heart overthumping, his bladed lines peppered with ready-market gangster swerve and cringing in awe of themselves. I want to laugh, but

      I must commit to my focus. I must be typical, single, black, with an 18-to-30-year-old male child behind bars. How deftly I have learned the up/back of that tiring Watusi.

      I guess it’s a poem, he’d mutter.

      Throw it away if you want.

      And oh, I’d ache at what he’d done, the bottoms he’d found, the clutch he claimed on what refused to be held, the queries scraped from surface. What are you chile?, I’d whisper as I read. Could there be a dream just temporarily deferred wallowing in those drooping denims and triple-x sweats, could there be a poet wrapped tight against the world in those swaddling clothes?

      He was the writer then, but now, reluctant resident of the Middlesex County House of Correction, he is the writer, sanctioned by the baddest of badasses because he has trumpeted the power of twisting verb and noun not only to say things, but to get shit:

      They paying me to write love letters to their ladies.

      I write poems if they rather have that,

      this one big musclehead brother everybody be sweatin

      even asked me to write a letter to his mama on her birthday.

      They call him Scribe.

      They bring him their imploded dreams, letters from their women-in-waiting tired of waiting. On deadline, he spins impossible sugar onto the precise lines of legal pads, pens June/moon dripping enough to melt a b-girl’s hard heart. He drops to scarred knees, moans and whimpers in stilted verse, coaxing last ink from a passed-around ballpoint, making it wail:

      please please babygirl,

      don’t be talking about not waiting out my time,

      only five years left, that ain’t much,

      hey Scribe, Scribe, hook me up, man,

      I ain’t got no answer for this shit she sudden talkin.

      Tattooed in riotous colors, they circle him in the common room, whispering to him beneath the surface of their reputations:

      Got a job for you Scribe, got a job.

      When the letters are crafted just right, copied over and over and edited for the real, the customers stumble through the aloud reading of them, scared of their own new voices. Too dazzled to demand definition, they scrunch scarred foreheads and whistle through gold caps at the three-syllable kickverbs:

      I’m gon’ trust you, they tell my son. I’m gon’ trust you on this.

      They don’t want their softness. They don’t want it.

      You know, Scribe, damn, damn this shit SI
    NGS!

      You blessed man, you blessed.

      I don’t know what you saying man, but it sho sound good.

      So I’m gon’ trust you. I’m gon’ trust you on this.

      Then they copy the words in their own hand and send spun silk shoutouts to the freewalking world, hoping that a disillusioned girlfriend or a neglected mother or a wife-in-waiting tired of waiting will slit open the envelope and feel a warm repentant soul spill out into her hands.

      And I must admit, as a fellow poet, I envy my son, this being necessary. Think of it. Which of us would refuse to try on the first face of a killer, our life teetering on every line? Wouldn’t we want to craft a new front for everyone just once, to rewrite one moment of a life story, to beg for mercy on behalf of someone who has never known life on his knees?

      And at the end of our flowery betrayal, that white-heat moment of no sound. In the steamy pocket of it, all we’d need is one person rising up slow, full of spit and menace, to say:

      O.K., O.K., I’m gon’ trust you on that one.

      I’m gon’ have to trust you on that.

      THE CIRCUS IS IN TOWN

      And this time there’s trouble.

      Whistle-toothed carnies

      blow their wretched sugar

      into strained balloons of blood.

      God’s beasts, inflamed and loony

      in unlatched cages, fuck furiously

      across all species—lion with grizzly,

      ape with his keeper.

      The alligator woman claws at a hell

      of skin, listens to her cunt snap shut,

      and shrieks at what the moon has told her.

      The baby floating in a jar lists to the left,

      bumps its head hard against the glass,

      slowly reveals a worming eye. The vague

      chaos brings a smile to his swirling.

      And I am standing on an old roller coaster

      whipping through the dark. A sculpted lion’s

      head leers from the first car, one marbled eye

      lost long ago to wind. No ropes, belts, or bars

      bind my body. There is nothing to keep me

      from flying loose and slamming against that

      building with its ghostly cadre of bumper cars.

      The ragged clack of my rises and dips disturb

      and intrigue the growl-faced boy and the woman

      balancing her sex on three misshapen legs.

      Their milky, eager eyes flap locked,

      turn up, upward.

      I do not fall,

      and this amazes me, amazes them.

      Yet still I go faster,

      the speed biting holes in my hair,

      whittling scream to whisper,

      blurring tempera clown leers.

      The damned thing squeals up, up,

      hugging the rickety matchstick track,

      ribboning the sheet of grease-scented dark.

      Up this insanely, the air boasts a simple pain,

      and I gulp breath as feverishly

      as the alligator girl scratches her skin

      to find a soft, definite history beneath.

      Watch me.

      Watch along with the limber,

      the slithering,

      the toothless,

      the doomed.

      Dance in gleeful anticipation

      of my plummet to the midway.

      Stand by until I have fallen.

      Let the freaks sniff out the parts they need.

      Then separate the splinters of wood

      from those of bone.

      HER OTHER NAME

      for Girl X, Chicago

      The first thing we took away was your name.

      We erased the bleak shame from each syllable,

      blurred the image of your tiny body broken into

      network sound bytes, snippets of videotape

      with a swollen face x-ed out.

      xas in she is no longer a good girl.

      xas in two simple lines crossing

      where a beating heart should be.

      You were little, like we don’t want to remember.

      You were stutter-folded, you were beaten liquid

      on those lonely stairs, your skin was slashed,

      you were raped with a fist and sticks, insecticide

      sprayed into your seeing and down the tunnel of

      your throat. He must have held your mouth open,

      stretching the circle, leaving moons in your lip.

      The violation left you blind and without tongue,

      wrecked the new clock of you. You were jump rope

      in double time and pigeon-toed, navy blue Keds

      with round toes and soles like paper, jelly sandwiches

      and grape smash fingers, you, ashy-kneed rose,

      missing rib, splintered and flinching through

      a death sleep. In which direction do we pray?

      To recreate you, they relied on ritual.

      Weeping nurses gently parted your hair, the teeth

      of the comb tipped in rubber, and dried blood

      showered from your scalp like chips of paint.

      They rubbed warm oil through the unraveling braids,

      threaded ribbon through to the ends.

      We will give you back your life

      by pretending you are still alive.

      Lowering your x into a tub of warm water, they

      scrubbed you with stinging soap, sang songs filled

      with light and lyric, then dabbed you dry with those

      brutal sickbed towels, avoiding the left nipple,

      smashed before it began. Wrapping you in the stiff garb

      of virgins, they told you that you were healed,

      there in that stark room of beeping machines

      and blood vials and sterilized silver, they built

      you a child’s body and coaxed your battered heart back inside.

      Girl

      x. The violation left. x

      you blind and x voiceless

      And they braided your hair every day, gently,

      the ritual insane, strands over, under, through, over,

      under, through, fingers locked in languid weave,

      until the same of it all brought your voice back.

      The nurses cheered, told you they’d found a cure

      for history, that the unreal would refuse to be real.

      Soon you’ll be able to see again, they whispered.

      I know you never meant to be ungrateful, my rib,

      when you rose up half and growled this grace:

      that’s

      that’s

      O.K. you

      can keep

      my

      eyes

      FORGOTTEN IN ALL THIS

      In the scarred fresco Joseph

      is the outline, eluding.

      Under close eye, the rotted color

      may reveal a beard,

      a muted and battered halo,

      one sullen eye cast toward

      the wrapped and luminous swaddle

      that became the world,

      damning what the world was before.

      His wife, earth hips in flawed marble

      or thick tempera, is spoiled and yes,

      blessed silly, already beyond him,

      not needing to acknowledge a mere man

      etched as afterthought among sheep.

      What’s left of his head is always in his hands.

      Crinkled and cracking backdrop

      of Sacra Familia, he is tagged dispensable

      whenever the three are considered.

      The child and mother are polished,

      redeemed, lifted almost to breathing.

      Their color deafens. He is crutch,

      inn searcher, tonal balance, ampersand,

      weary of squinting against the rays of the son.

      Artist, look again at him.

      Give him back his eyes,

      the burnished cheek.

      Draw him whirling, furious about all this.

      Make him holy beyond canvas,


      chisel, and the saying so.

      Brushstroke him a mouth that moves,

      with teeth that clench and assert.

      Let his wails wash over us,

      we who rendered him no brighter than hill and oxen,

      we who always knew his name but never who he was.

      DOWN 4 THE UP STROKE

      for Danny Solis

      But you have poetry, you say.

      And if you can tell me what poetry is,

      where the line is drawn

      between the beauty and the breathing

      of breath into something to make it beautiful,

      I will claim poetry as my own.

      Poets, when last breath sought to seduce,

      your mojo flashed skinned nerve to the open air.

      You bitched and cajoled until I was pissed enough

      to assign you the task of my wounds.

      You said Patricia,

      come to us if the world bleeds through.

      You drove in from the city and backhanded me

      with your clunky rhymes, your limp couplets,

      your falterings, your leaps for the sky,

      your lean and joyless works in progress.

      You jumped up and down on my heart,

      yelling beat beat,

      when I was June’s only sin, you screeched

      beat beat,

      when there was nothing I could do but be a liar

      flat under everyone, you angled storm boot heels

      at my chest until the irritation warmed dead muscle

      and pulled it onto the dance floor. Ignore the mic static.

      What unflinching poems spring from the mouths

      of the almost dead. I could never love me like this.

      WOMEN ARE TAUGHT

      I’m convinced it’s a man’s smell that pulls us in—

      faux leather and spiced soap, splashes of lemon

      and Old Spice, the odd oil tinging his sweat.

      As women, we were designed to wither beneath

      the mingled stench of them. As a woman, I was

      yo, yo, baby work that big ass, you must want

      designed

      what I got

      to wither

      c’mon honey just let daddy stick it in a little bit

      beneath

      bitch of course i love you i give you money don’t i

      Why else would i cage myself in glorious raiment

      of spandex and lace, paint my panting the hues

      of burn, twist my voice from madam to smoke?

      Why else, once he has left me, do I bury my face

      in the place his sex has pressed, inhale

      what he has left, and pray to die there?

      On the day I married, I was such porcelain,

      delicate and poised to shatter. I was unflinching,

     


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